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WWDC 2018

[Laughter]
[Cheers and applause]
TIM COOK: Good morning!
Good morning!
Good morning.
Good morning.

Good morning!
Thanks for joining us.
And welcome to San Francisco.

Welcome to WWDC 2015.
Although we may not have any -- thank you --
high-flying trapeze acts, we do have a lot of great things
to talk about this morning.
This developer conference continues to be the epicenter
of change for not only Apple, but the industry.

This is our 26th WWDC.
We have attendees today from over 70 countries,
and 80 percent are here for the very first time.

This is our most global conference ever.
And a special shout-out for our 350 scholarship winners.

[Cheers and applause]
These guys are unbelievable.
I spent some time with them yesterday.

Our youngest scholarship winner is a 12-year-old girl
from New York.
She is going to have a fantastic future ahead.

We've got over a hundred sessions planned for you
and over 150 labs so that you can get your hands
on our latest technologies.
And we've got over a thousand Apple engineers to answer just
about any question that you might have.

Now, we've got a lot more people that would have liked
to have been here this morning, but unfortunately,
we just can't fit any more in, as you can tell.

And so for the first time,
we're not only live streaming the Keynote,
but we are live streaming 30 sessions
of the conference as well.
Now, before we get right to the show, I'd like to bring
up something that I saw on the news just a few days ago.
This is Brandon Moss of the Cleveland Indians,
and he hit his 100th career home run last Tuesday.

Obviously, it's a huge milestone if you are a baseball player.
Not a lot of people do this.
And you can imagine how much
that ball would mean to him to have it.
It turns out the ball was hit into the Indians' bull pen,
and his teammates decided to play a bit of a prank on him.

They decided to hold it for ransom.
And this is the list of things they asked for.
[Laughter] Apple Watches, iPads, MacBook Airs, iPhones.

It's unbelievable.
It's a shopping list for the Apple Store.
Now, Brandon would have had to raid an Apple Store
to get that ball back.
That didn't seem quite right to us, and so what we're going
to do is we're going to pay the ransom.
And I have the ball right here.
We are giving the ball to Brandon, and we are going
to give everything his teammates asked for to them
so everybody is happy.

So congratulations, Brandon, on a hundred home runs,
and good luck on the next hundred.
Now, we've got a jam-packed morning for you.
We are going to get started with OS X.
We are bringing a whole bunch
of new great capabilities to the Macintosh.
And next we've got a great update for iOS,
the world's most advanced mobile operating system.

And today we're bringing native apps
to the Watch with a new version.
With a new version of the watchOS,
which gives the developers even more time
to create even greater apps for the Watch
that will change the world.
Now, all three of these ecosystems together provide
incredible opportunities for developers
and unbelievable possibilities for users.
So we are very excited about this.
There's a lot here, and so I am going to dispense
with my normal updates other
than to tell you everything's going great.
[Laughter]
And I'd like to bring out my friend
and colleague Craig Federighi to take you through OS X and iOS.

Craig.
CRAIG FEDERIGHI: Good morning!
It's fantastic to be with you here at WWDC.
The team has been doing some amazing work this year,
and I am thrilled to be able to share it with you today.

We are going to start with OS X.
Now, our current release, Yosemite, is a big, bold,
beautiful release with a gorgeous new UI
and breakthrough features like Continuity that let you work
across your devices like never before.
Now, the adoption rate for Yosemite is just incredible.

In fact, over 55 percent
of active Mac users are running our latest update,
and this is just unprecedented in the history of our industry.

[Laughter] In fact, Yosemite has the fastest adoption rate
for any PC operating system ever.
So thank you.

So for our next big release of OS X, we knew we wanted to build
on those strengths of Yosemite
with some really great refinements and advances.
The only real question, of course, was what to call it.
So we had to once again turn to our crack Apple Marketing Team.

Now, in typical California fashion, they started
with a project kickoff meeting.
[Laughter]
And then headed immediately into a team building off site.
[Laughter]
Now, of course they are in their traditional Apple Marketing
Free-Bottom Fridays attire.
They say it's all part of their process.
I am not sure I get it.

Ultimately, this didn't yield any names,
so they called in a consultant.
[Laughter]
He told them the answer was to be found within.
Not within themselves, but within Yosemite.
And so the new name for OS X is OS X El Capitan.

For El Capitan, we focused in two major areas --
experience and performance.

For experience, we've made Spotlight more expressive,
more powerful, and more knowledgeable than ever.
We've made big enhancements to the apps you use most,
and we made some real great advancements in the area
of how you manage windows on the system.
But rather than just talk about it, I'd like to show it to you,
so let's start with a demo right now.
Now, your first task, of course, in a demonstration
or whenever you wake your Mac, is finding the cursor,
and El Capitan makes this easier than ever.
I just do that little shake we all normally do,
and there it is.
It comes right out to greet you.
It's really handy.

Now, we brought other great gestures to the system.
I am just going to go here in Mail.

I have a message here from Eddy.
Looks like -- well, now -- [Laughter] -- that's a keeper.
So I can actually mark it unread to keep it just
by swiping two fingers across the trackpad just like that.
And this one I'd kind of like to delete, so I am just going
to swipe it away just like that.

So some real nice little gestures.
Let's move on now to Safari.
Now, in Safari, I have some sites that I like to keep
around because I refer to them on and off throughout the day,
and now in Safari, I can pin those sites just like this.
So there's -- I am going to pin my Twitter site here.

And of course I have been following the Warriors.
Go Warriors, we are going to get it done.
Just like that.
Now, Pinned Sites have a lot of special properties.
For one, if I close this window and reopen it,
you see that my Pinned Sites are all right there,
and they load instantly.
Now, Pinned Sites also behave differently when I follow links,
so I am just going to click on one here,
and you notice it opens in a new tab, but my pinned site remains.
Now I am going to open up a couple more links.

This one, let's see, this one.
I will take a quick look.
This one looks like some kind of presentation video.

This one is about the Giants.
Have you ever had this happen to you?
You are like, Where is this audio coming from?
Now with just a tap, you can mute it or find
out where it came from and shut it down just like that.
So I am interested in seeing this Giants game,
and now Spotlight can actually help me out there.
So I am just going to do a search for the SF Giants,
and we see right now I get current game scores,
upcoming games.
Looks like the game I want to go to is on Friday,
so I can just search for weather on Friday.
See we get the weather.
We can even resize the Spotlight panel and move it around.

I mean, there's innovation; huh?
[Laughter] But I can also express myself in my own words
in Spotlight searches now, so I can do things like slides
from Brian, and you see I find those there.
But how about slides from Brian about El Capitan?
You see, I find exactly what I am looking for in my own words.

Now, this works great in other apps as well.
Let's try it out in Mail.
So I've been really busy, of course, the last couple of days,
so I have been getting a little behind on my Mail.
I want to see the messages that I've received from Phil
but that I haven't responded to yet.

So I am just going to say "mail I ignored from Phil."
[Laughter] There are a few, but I will be getting back
to him right after the show.

[Laughter] So next, of course, it's great in the Finder
as well, so if I wanted to look at documents that I was working
on last year at this time, I might say something like
"documents I worked on last June."
And I find exactly what I am looking for.
So this is really a great way to search.

Next I want to turn to window management, so I am just going
to run a script here that's going to open up a whole bunch
of windows to simulate kind of what my desktop looks
like after a day working on OS X because it's a powerful system
and we tend to have a lot of things open.
OS X provides some great ways to navigate your windows,
and one of those is Mission Control.
In El Capitan, we made Mission Control smoother,
simpler, and faster than ever.

I am going to take three fingers and swipe up on the trackpad.
We get this gorgeous overview of Mission Control.
I'll just bring forward Safari.

Let's do that again and bring up Mail.
Just like that.
Works really great.

Of course, OS X provides great tools also
to organize your windows, and one of those is Full Screen.
I am going to take this window here full screen,
and I am going to reply.
Looks like there's a message here from Eddy.
He says sorry about bailing on the team dinner last night.

He was apparently prepping for the Keynote.
So that's understandable.
But it looks like, actually, I just got a new mail
from Jeff here, and now I can just click away, and it hides,
and then -- oh, hold on.
Busted, Eddy.

So I think I'll just drag this, actually,
right into my Compose window, it hops up automatically,
and I can do it just like that.

It's really great.
And I can even open up tabs in Compose as well.
It's really handy.

So this is a great way now to work in full screen in Mail.
Thank you.

Now, we've done something totally new to El Capitan,
and it's the ability to work really easily
on two windows side by side.

So I am just going to click and hold here on the green button.
And you see it's prompting me to pick a side.
I will just drop it in.

And you notice I get an expose of all my other windows.
Let me pick the new News app, just like that.
Of course, I can resize this window
to style it just the way I want.
How about that blur?
Again, innovation.
[Laughter] So, great way to work.
Here I can drag links, for instance,
from Safari right in here.
You notice in the new Notes app, I get a beautiful graphical link
that gives me a nice thumbnail
that helps me identify what I dragged in there.
I am going to drag in some yurts.
I think yurts, first time mentioned
on the WWDC Keynote stage.
There you go.
Got some yurts here.

Great way to work split screen.
We've also provided a really easy way to move windows
into their own desktops.

So let me just take this window here, I'm just going to drag it
up past the top of the screen, and drop it in just like that.
So easy. I can also do this to take a window full screen.

So let's take Photos, just drop it in right here,
I took it full screen.
Check this out.

I am going to take Messages, drop it on Photos,
and create a split view just like that.
Totally awesome.

And that is a quick look at some improvements
to the experience in El Capitan.

So we saw in El Capitan a powerful form of search
in Spotlight that lets you compose your searches
in your own words.
It knows more than ever,
can look up weather, stocks, game scores.

We saw gestures, for instance, just swiping to delete in Mail.
And, of course, pin sites in Safari
and the ability to easily mute tabs.

A great new Notes app that supports text styling,
checklists, and graphical links.
And better window management than ever
with a beautiful new Mission Control interface,
easy access to your spaces bar, and of course,
the ability to do split view and adjust it
to see exactly what you are looking for,
every pixel of your display devoted to your content.
Of course, there's much more to experience in El Capitan,
but now I want to turn to performance.
So we've optimized performance throughout the system.
In fact, we are seeing about a 1.4 times acceleration
in app launching, a 2x improvement
in the snappiness of switching apps.
The time to get first Mail messages, twice as fast.

Opening a PDF in preview, four times as fast.
But we've also made deep architectural improvements,
and that brings us to Metal.

Thank you.
Last year we introduced Metal at WWDC as a way
to accelerate graphics in high-performance games.
It takes the overhead out of OpenGL,
providing a high-performance API
that gives the game direct access to the power
of the underlying graphics hardware.
Well, this year we are bringing Metal to the Mac.

And we are doing more than that.
Because we are taking the graphic stacks on which apps
on OS X are built, Core Animation and Core Graphics,
and moving them from OpenGL to run natively on top of Metal,
making everything you do faster.
We are seeing 50 percent improvements
in rendering performance and a 40 percent reduction
in the amount of CPU necessary to do graphics.
That means improved performance for your applications
and better battery life.
But the benefits of Metal don't stop there.
Metal's also great for high-performance apps.

In fact, Metal combines the compute power of OpenCL
and the graphics power of OpenGL
in a higher performance API that does both.

And what we've seen from working
with early pro developers is really phenomenal.
Adobe came in and, in short order,
was able to deliver an eight times improvement
in their rendering effects inside of After Effects,
and they have been able to take the drawing engine
in Illustrator, move it on top of Metal, and take kinds of UI
that previously was noninteractive,
like zoom of extremely detailed drawings,
and make it completely flawless
and interactive, thanks to Metal.
Adobe is so pleased with this they said they are committed
to adopting Metal on their OS X apps,
seeing performance increases up to 8x.
They are excited about what it can do
for their Creative Cloud users.
Of course, Metal is also fantastic for games
with a 10x improvement.

That's ten times improvement in drawing performance.
So we brought in Epic to see what they could do
in short order, and the results are really phenomenal.

I'd like to welcome to the stage Josh Adams
and Billy Bramer for a quick demo.
Thank you, Craig.
Thank you very much for having us here today.
So last year Metal revolutionized graphics on iOS,
and now Apple's amazed us again by bringing Metal to the Mac.
Of course, this is great news for games,
but also for the tools that we use to make those games.

Here you are seeing Epic's upcoming multiplayer title
Fortnite, running entirely on Metal.
We are modifying it directly within the Unreal Engine,
a development tool that powers many of today's best games.
It's quite a bit going on in this scene, though,
so let's break it down.

First, there are 64 different layers
of rendering effects, and that's a lot.
All combining together, though,
to produce what you see on the scene today.
If we go into a simple wireframe mode, you can see the thousands
of building blocks that make up this world.

We can start to add in layers, flat shading, detailed lighting,
runtime shadows, and finally we combine them all together
to bring Fortnite's fun and lighthearted aesthetic to life.

The interesting thing here, though,
is that all of the effects you are seeing are being done
completely in real-time.

Notice how the shadows and objects interact nicely
as Josh moves the car around.
Finally, we can change the time of day on the fly,
dramatically altering the mood of the entire scene.
All of this is thanks to the efficiency of Metal.
In fact, we are seeing a 70 percent reduction
in CPUs compared to OpenGL, enabling developers like us
to create richer 3D worlds.
Speaking of those worlds, let's hop into the game, Fortnite.

Now, if you've ever built a pillow fort
and battled imaginary monsters with your friends,
you already know how to play Fortnite.

This is the end-of-the-world scenario you have been training
for since you were a kid.
It's a beautifully stylized universe.

You can destroy anything you want.
Gather resources and build a fort.
So let's go ahead and wreck this car.

Gather its metal.
And continue our wanton destruction by chopping
down this tree to get some wood for later.

Did we mention there are purple death storms,
like this one, for instance?
We should go.

Luckily, while we were out exploring, we found a multitude
of weapons, and this broom.
If we can just get across the field,
our friend has been busy building a fort across the --
did we mention the storms are made of monsters?
We are going to need something a bit better than this broom.

Nice! There's our friend laying down some covering fire.
Hey, look out!
We call that move the power cord.

I've got a bad feeling about this.
You are going to need a bigger fort.
Place a trap, head inside.

Looks like an enemy has broken into our fort.
All right.
Let's use that wood we gathered earlier to fix this wall,
build some stairs, meet up with our friend topside.
Glad you could make it.
[Monster screaming]
Whether you are a gamer or a game developer,
Metal opens new possibilities for rich and engaging worlds.
You can download the Unreal Engine for Mac right now,
and the Fortnite beta for Mac starts this fall.
Thank you very much.
[Cheers and applause]
CRAIG FEDERIGHI: Thank you, guys.
That was great.
We have been totally impressed with what Epic has been able
to accomplish in such a short time.
And this is in part because the work they did to adopt Metal
in their rendering engines for iOS immediately pays dividends
on OS X, and we are seeing this with many other developers
as well who are bringing their gaming engines immediately
to the Mac.

And pro app makers are seeing the benefits of Metal as well,
people like The Foundry and Autodesk.
I think we are going to see pro users, gamers,
and all of us benefiting
from the performance advantages of Metal.
So that is El Capitan, improvements
to experience and performance.
Now, El Capitan is available to all of you developers today.
We will be doing a public beta once again in July,
and we will be rolling out to everyone
with a free upgrade this fall.

And that's our update on OS X.
Next -- you guessed it -- iOS.

Now, our current big release of iOS is iOS 8,
and iOS 8 was a huge release with tons of new features
for users and a phenomenal set of technologies
that you developers have been able to use
to deliver all-new experiences to the platform.
The upgrade rate for iOS has been fantastic.

We have 83 percent of active iPhone users currently running
the latest OS.
And this is really important
because it means not only are they getting the most recent
features, but they're also up to date on all the security fixes,
and you're able to know as a developer
that you can target all the users
with the latest and greatest APIs.
And this is a benefit
that actually remains really unique to iOS.
So we are now looking forward to iOS 9, and as we conceived
of what we wanted to accomplish, first and foremost,
we wanted to elevate the foundations of the platform,
things like extending your battery life,
improving performance, and enhancing security
to protect customer data.
But there was more we wanted to do.

Adding intelligence throughout the user experience in a way
that enhances how you use your device
but without compromising your privacy.

Things like improving the apps that you use most
and taking the experience of the iPad to the next level.
I want to start today with intelligence and Siri.

Now, Siri has quietly become incredibly popular.
It serves over a billion requests per week.
And this is in part because Siri has gotten so great
at understanding what we are saying.
In just the last year, we've seen a 40 percent reduction
in word error rate, down to 5 percent.

That's an industry leading number.
And Siri is 40 percent faster than ever
at responding to what we say.

Now, for iOS 9, Siri has a beautiful new UI and is capable
of doing so much more.
Things like "show me photos
from Utah last August" can instantly show you the right
photos from your photo library.
And Siri's really great at taking reminders.

Now you can ask Siri things like "remind me
to grab my coffee off the roof of my car when I get in."
Because Siri knows now when you've gotten in the car.

And of course, we often want to take reminders about things
that we are looking at on our device, some content inside
of our app, maybe a Safari.

Now you can say things like "remind me about this
when I get home," and that reminder refers right back
with a link to specifically what you were looking
at when you took that reminder.
So Siri is a great assistant.
But the best assistants are proactive.

And so on iOS 9, we are bringing proactivity throughout
the system.
So say you like to run in the morning, and when you do,
you like to listen to music.
Well, now your phone can learn that about you,
and when you plug in your headphones,
can offer up Now Playing automatically right
on the Lock screen.
And this is all context-sensitive to the time,
the place, and even the devices you are connected to,
so you do the same thing in the car later on, and it might offer
up the audio book that you have been listening to.
Now, as a great assistant,
your iPhone can now take invitations you receive
in your email and without you even touching them automatically
put them on your calendar and even give you a time
to leave reminder, taking
into account current traffic conditions, and of course,
with just a swipe, give you access to driving directions.
Now, have you ever had this happen to you, you get a call,
the number looks kind of familiar,
but you are really not sure who it is?
As a great assistant, your phone can now look in your email
and find out who that person might be and suggest it
to you right on the Incoming Call screen.
It's super handy.

Now, this kind of proactivity is also great
when it comes to Search.

So now when you swipe to the left of the Home screen to get
to Search, you see that Siri offers great suggestions,
things like the people that you might want to contact now based
on your upcoming meetings and your communication patterns,
the apps that you might want to launch based, for instance,
on what you just downloaded from the App Store and haven't
yet tried out, or apps you tend to use this time of day,
and also easy one-tap links to locations
that are relevant nearby, and even breaking news.

When it comes to Search, we also know more than ever before.
So for instance, you can search for sports scores.
And we now support video search, of popular video sites
like Vivi, Vimeo, YouTube, and the iTunes Store.
And we have these great descriptive cards
with a Play button so you can play directly
from your search result.
Most importantly, we now have an API for Search.
So now when a user performs a search,
we can find content behind the apps they have installed
on the device and pull those up in Results, and when they tap,
they are deep-linked directly into the application.
You see for instance here Airbnb.
They can get their result.

Of course, we even provide a convenient backlink
so they can get right back to their search results.
So we think these kinds
of intelligence features really make a huge difference
in your experience in iOS.
And to show you how, I would
like to give you a quick demo now.
So I want to take you through a day in the life with iOS 9,
and we are going to start with a typical day for me today.

We are going to start in my bedroom
when I woke up in the morning.
You will notice because my phone knows that in the morning I
like to meditate that it's offered me a meditation app
right here in the bottom left of the screen.
So I can just swipe up from the bottom left,
and I am taken right in to meditate.
Ah, this is so serene.
Well, it looks like I got a message here from Phil.

So Phil says that he is putting together the invite
for tonight's big karaoke potluck, and can I still pick
up this super awesome karaoke machine?
Well, you know, Siri actually, when I take reminders,
is able to link me right back to what I am looking for,
so if I want to remember to pick this up, I can just say this
to Siri: "Remind me about this later today."
And so Siri will put together a reminder,
and you see the link right back to what I am looking for.

Well, I think after all, meditation isn't probably
for me, so maybe I'll move on to exercise.
So I head into the home gym here, and because my phone knows
that when I am in the home gym and I hook up headphones and I
like to listen to music, watch what happens when I plug
in the cord of my headphones.

Jumps right in and offers me some energetic music.
So let's all bust a move.
I don't know what kind
of exercise we are all doing here, but pretty good.
Looks like actually I've got that invitation
that Phil was going to send me.

Now, normally I would have to actually go into Mail,
look at the time, put this on my Calendar, but in fact,
my phone has automatically done that for me.

Let me just swipe down here into Notifications Center,
and we will look at my calendar for the day.
You notice it automatically has already been added right there.

Now, if we look at the rest of my day,
ahead I have my vocal warm-ups
for the karaoke performance, then WWDC.

It looks like I have a little bit of time
to prepare my dish for the big potluck.
So I am going to head into the kitchen now,
and let's just swipe in.
When I am looking for recipes, for instance,
I like to go into Search.

Let's just swipe over into Search.
We see Siri has actually already -- before I typed a character --
made suggestions for me for people I could contact,
for instance, like Trent Reznor, my vocal coach.
[Laughter] So I can just tap.
Here I can call Trent up, and he can help me tap
into my inner pain and rage that allows me
to fuel my vocal performances.
I actually haven't been able to find the pain
and rage, truth be told.
Also, we have all these great apps I can run
and locations nearby -- for instance, because it's morning,
you see coffee and tea and breakfast places are suggested.
As well as news.
But in this case, I actually want to do a search.

So I have some potatoes I think I could make use
of in this recipe.
So let's just search for potato.

Here you notice I am getting search results right
from Yummly.
Let me tap into Yummly, and you see I am deep-linked directly
in, so I get the great view provided by that application.
Now, potato chips aren't exactly what I am looking for,
so I am going to hit the Back link here,
and I can browse directly
in to another result, Canadian Poutine.
That looks exactly like what the doctor ordered.

Yes. Let's look at the ingredients.
Looks like 6 tablespoons of unsalted butter.
I am down with that.

I am going to make at least a double batch.
So I can just use Search to do a conversion of tablespoons,
figure out how much that is.

So that actually is 3/4 of a cup.
I am going to round up to an even quart
and make myself some fine poutine.

[Laughter] So Search is really handy,
but Siri is also great at search.
So I want to jump forward to later today.

When I think I will be reminiscing about WWDC's past.
I can ask Siri to help me with that.
Show my photos from last June in San Francisco.

Oh, yeah, this is great, all these photos from WWDC.
You notice now Photos in iOS 9 has this great scrubber bar
at the bottom, so I can easily slide
through photos super quickly, just like this.
Oh, boy, now we are into the karaoke night.
This is some fine stuff.

Phil really does an awesome Viking crooner.
This is good stuff.
But of course, the king of karaoke --
[Laughter] -- Eddy Cue.
In fact, when I want to get really pumped up and inspired
for karaoke night, I like to turn
to my Eddy karaoke album, so let's do that now.
Show my karaoke photos of Eddy.
Oh, that is the master at work.

Hitting -- I love this hat.
[Laughter] This is totally dope.
Great stuff.

Well, I could really look at these just all day,
but you know, actually,
my assistant has given me a reminder based
on traffic conditions that it's time to leave, so I am going
to wrap up this demo of intelligence on iOS 9.
[Cheers and applause]
So you've seen how we've been able
to bring intelligence throughout the experience in iOS 9,
but we do it in a way that does not compromise your privacy.

We don't mine your email, your photos, or your contacts
in the cloud to learn things about you.
We honestly just don't want to know.

All of this is done on device, and it stays
on device, under your control.
[Cheers and applause]
And if we do have to perform a lookup on your behalf,
for example, for current traffic conditions, it's anonymous,
it's not associated with your Apple ID, it's not linked
with other Apple services,
and it's not shared with third parties.
Why would do you that?
It is in your control.
That is intelligence in iOS 9.
Next, let's turn to Apple Pay.
And to take you through it, I'd like to bring
to the stage our Vice President
of our Apple Pay business, Jennifer Bailey.
Jennifer.
[Cheers and applause]
JENNIFER BAILEY: Thanks, Craig.
It's great to be here.
We have been hard at work on our goal of replacing the wallet,
and we've got some exciting updates for you today.
I hope you've all tried Apple Pay with our super easy, secure,
and private way to pay.

Last year we started with credit and debit cards, and we now have
over 2,500 banks supporting Apple Pay.
And this fall, Discover will bring Apple Pay to the more
than 50 million card members.
Popular merchants are also expanding their acceptance
for Apple Pay, including great retailers
who will be supporting Apple Pay this year,
including Trader Joe's, Baskin-Robbins, and JCPenny.

These incredible brands join a great list of the biggest
and best merchants supporting Apple Pay
since our launch in October.

And for you are basketball fans, if you are lucky enough
to have finals tickets, you will be able to pay
for all your team logo wear at both arenas using Apple Pay.

Small businesses are also important for us,
so we are working with innovative companies like Square
to enable millions of small businesses to accept Apple Pay.
This fall, Square will launch a gorgeous new reader.
Preorders are starting today on square.com,
and these will be available
in our Apple Retail Stores starting this fall.
With fantastic support of merchants, both large and small,
we will surpass 1 million locations accepting Apple Pay
next month.
And thanks to our amazing developers,
we have great momentum within apps as well.
Apple Pay is so easy to use in-app,
our developers are telling us they are seeing more
than two times increase in checkout rates.
And we are adding new apps with Apple Pay
to the App Store every day.
Here are some of the latest, representing a great range
of categories, from Delta in travel to Etsy,
the leading crafts marketplace.
These apps join an incredible group that are redefining new
and simpler ways to pay.

We're also excited to be working with Pinterest.
Later this month, Pinterest will launch Buyable Pins,
where you will be able to buy items from thousands of stores,
including Neiman Marcus and Macy's,
right from within the Pinterest app using Apple Pay,
and only on iOS.

With the great momentum of Apple Pay in the U.S.,
we are now excited to announce
that we are bringing Apple Pay to the UK.
[Cheers and applause]
And it's coming next month!
We will launch with eight of the most popular banks,
with more coming this fall.

With this great lineup of banks, we will support more
than 70 percent of the credit and debit cards in the UK.
Great merchants are also lining up to support Apple Pay,
like Boots, Costa Coffee, and iconic British brands,
like Marks and Spencer and Waitrose.
We will have over 250,000 locations supporting Apple Pay
in the UK.
That's more than we started with in the U.S.
at our initial launch.

We are also thrilled that our customers will be able
to commute and pay for their fares
on the London transportation system with Apple Pay.

So that's Apple Pay coming to the UK.
Now let's talk about some of the new features
that we are adding in iOS 9.
First, you will be able to add your store,
credit, and debit cards.

Store cards offer unique membership benefits,
and leading retailers like Kohl's, JCPenney,
and BJs will be the first to offer their cards on Apple Pay.

We will also add loyalty and rewards cards,
also with a great lineup of merchants.
Kohl's will bring Yes2You programs,
Walgreens their Balance Rewards card, and for your coffee
and doughnut lovers, Dunkin' Donuts will bring Apple Pay
to their DDPerks beginning this fall.

and Apple Pay automatically presents the right card,
so you will never miss a reward.

With the expansion of Apple Pay and the new types of cards,
we decided it's time to rename Passbook to Wallet.
One place for all your credit and debit cards, loyalty cards,
boarding passes, and more.
We told you last year that our ultimate goal was
to replace the wallet, and we are well
on the way to doing just that.
We couldn't be happier with the progress towards our vision
and with the momentum of Apple Pay.
Thank you.
CRAIG FEDERIGHI: So that's Apple Pay.
Let's turn now to our enhancements
to the apps you use most, and we are going to start with Notes.

Notes is used regularly by about half of our users on iPhone,
and for iOS 9, we have some really great enhancements.
It starts with how you work with simple text.

So now Notes provides a really handy toolbar
with formatting options, so it's easy, for instance,
to create titles, heading styles, numbered lists.

But of course, we all like to create checklists in our notes,
and so Notes makes that really easy.
And of course, you can just check off your items
with just a tap.
Now, because a picture is worth a thousand words,
we make it easy to get at your camera and your camera roll
and put photos directly in your notes.
We are also providing a great new way to capture your ideas
by just drawing with your finger.

We provide some great drawing tools.
You can make sketches with these tools
and drop them right inside your note.

Now, I don't know if you are like me,
but a lot of times the things I want to put
on my notes are things I am looking at that I find
in other apps -- for instance, a web page in Safari.
So now from the Share sheet, you can just
with a tap add a link right back into your notes.
And we make it really easy to find your notes.
So we organize them by time, of course,
and now we have these great thumbnails
to let you see your embedded images at a glance,
but we also provide this cool new Attachments view
that shows you all of your photos, your maps links,
your website links, and when you tap, you can get right back
to the note where they came from.

Now, Notes is great on iPhone, on iPad,
and of course, on the Mac as well.
And all of your content is kept up to date across all
of your devices via iCloud.
That's a quick update to Notes.
Next, let's turn to Maps.
We've continued to invest heavily in Maps,
and the improvements are really awesome.

We are seeing five billion user requests per week.
Usage on iOS is 3.5 times higher
than for the next leading mapping app.

Now, Maps, of course,
historically have been focused on drivers.
They emphasize things like freeways and roads.

But we know for a lot of our iOS users, they are mostly focused
on public transit, and so now we've created a great map just
for them.

Yes, it's Transit.
With Transit, we provide a map that emphasizes all
of the different transit lines, buses, and trains,
subway stations and so forth, and when you tap on a station,
you can see all the lines that run through it
with their departure times.
And we do multimodal routing, whether you are taking a train,
a subway, a bus, or a ferry.

And we provide step-by-step directions, including time
for walking directions.
But we've taken special care to get the details right,
the ones that matter, with Transit.
For instance, if you take a subway station like this one
in Columbus Circle in New York, it's not just a point on a map.

If you look closer,
it's actually an enormous underground structure spanning
many city blocks, and so we carefully surveyed all
of the entrances and exits
so that we could give you walking directions based
on the time to travel from where you actually are.

Now, this not only saves you a ton of walking,
but it also probably is the difference
between catching your train on time and being stuck.

It's really great.
We've taught Siri all about Transit, so it's effortless
to ask Siri for directions.
And we are going to be rolling Maps out, Transit,
starting with these cities across the world, and --
-- with these and 300 more in China.
Now, when it comes to searching in Maps,
we are now letting you find locations
by type nearby with just a tap.
And when you find the location you are interested in,
the card will tell you right away right there
in the bottom whether they support Apple Pay.
Support those Apple Pay merchants.

Maps is great on iPhone and iPad,
and of course, the Mac as well.

And that is Maps.
The apps that we've chosen to build in to iOS are there
because they represent fundamental experiences
to living on a mobile device.
And there's been one that we've been wanting to do for years,
something that so many of us find ourselves wanting
to do every day on our device, and so today I'm pleased
to announce that we are introducing a new application,
and it's called News.
News is beautiful content
from the world's greatest sources personalized for you.

Now, here's an article in News.
It's absolutely stunning.
Now, publishers can easily create beautiful content using
gorgeous imagery, custom layout, and rich typography.
But News is also interactive, and so to give you a look
at News in action, I'd like to invite
to the stage our Vice President of Application,
Product Management, Susan Prescott.
Susan.

[Cheers and applause]
SUSAN PRESCOTT: Thanks, Craig.
Thank you.

I am really excited to be the first person
to show you our new News app.
It's right here on the Home screen.

The first thing News wants to do is get a sense of what I like,
so it's going to give me a short list
of really great choices to choose from.

And you'll see as I tap, additional recommendations come
in on the bottom to give you even more choices.
So I read Atlantic, Wired, New York Times, and ESPN.

I am still with you, Warriors!
And Daring Fireball.
Topics, too, like science, baking, and travel.

I could keep going, but I think that's a great start,
so I will tap Done.
News creates a personalized feed called For You.

It's based on the choices I just made,
and it's all my News in one place.
You can see it looks great.

It's easy to scan, and it updates every time I check News.
The articles can come from anywhere,
but the best ones are built in our new Apple News format,
like this Wired article featuring Rashida Jones,
awesome in Parks & Rec and The Office.
Look at the rich typography, beautiful images,
and my favorite part are the really fun animations.
It's fast and fluid.
We think this offers the best mobile reading experience ever.

To get to the next article, I just swipe.
It's not just great for magazines;
it's great for newspapers too.

This is a New York Times article, and it looks
like a New York Times article.
Swipe down, there's a photo gallery right in line, fast,
fluid to swipe through.
Go to the next article, this one's from Quartz,
but I am seeing it because I said I am interested in science.

It's a pretty cool article about a font based
on Albert Einstein's handwriting.
The animation makes it come to life, and frankly,
who knew he had such neat handwriting?
It's kind of interesting.
Swipe again, and I get an article from Bon Appetit.

Great summer recipes,
and a crazy little jiggly thing, which is kind of fun.
[Laughter] So I am a little busy right now, so I am going
to go ahead and bookmark this to read later.
Now, ESPN, I love you, Steph.
Now, I read ESPN for the articles,
but there's also some beautiful --
[Laughter] -- photos and videos.

[Cheers and applause]
Some photos and videos built in.
Not so much last night.

Let's see if Steph can make this one.
Swish. All right.
He is going to be there for us next game.

In addition, data and stats are part of what's fun about sports,
so of course, rich info graphics can be part of it.
I am going to swipe back to For You.

Now, News is smart, so the more I read, the better it gets
at showing me stories I am interested in.
But what if I want to discover something new?
I can tap here in the bottom on Explore, and Explore,
based on what I've read,
will show me new publisher channels I might be interested
in and suggested topics.
Well, I love technology.
I am going to go ahead and follow that.

But News keeps track of more than a million topics.
So I can be much more specific about my interests.
To do that, I can tap on Search and type.

I am going to type Swift.
And I get a number of hits, everything from Taylor Swift,
to what I was looking for,
Apple's new programming language.
So it's a beautiful feed, and what's really cool
about this is there are powerful machine learning algorithms
that analyze the contents of the articles to figure
out which stories belong in which article.
This looks like just what I was hoping for.

I am going to go ahead and add Swift to my Favorites.
So let's take a look at Favorites.
I will tap down here.

Favorites is where I can see everything I am following,
including Swift, which I just added.
It's a great place to go if I want to dig
into a particular topic or if I want
to read a newspaper or a magazine.
Let's say today I want to read Wired.

You can tell I am in the Wired channel.
You see the Wired logo at the top
and the Wired channel starting with Top Stories.

I can swipe through and see a collection of the all the print
and web stories built in Apple News format,
and it looks terrific.

I am going to look at one more story.
This is about the first civilian artist in space.
Cool concept and really cool.

I want to show you this.
We've taken photo galleries to the next level
with something we call Photo Mosaics.

Look how beautiful it looks on the page.
Stunning. And, as you'd expect,
I just tap to zoom in on the photos.

It looks great.
We think there's never been a more beautiful magazine reading
experience, a mobile reading experience in general,
and this is just one of many channels
with beautiful stories built in Apple News format.
That is a really quick look at News.

We can't wait to get it in your hands.
Thank you very much.
[Cheers and applause]
CRAIG FEDERIGHI: So that's News.
Stunning content.
Personalized for you.

Fantastic on iPad and on iPhone as well.
And of course, unlike just
about any other news aggregation service we are aware
of on the planet, News is designed from the ground
up with your privacy in mind.
We worked with leading publishers,
like The New York Times,
who will be delivering 33 articles daily to News users,
and ESPN, who will be bringing the depth and range
of their phenomenal sports reporting.
And Conde Nast, who are bringing content from 17
of their magazines, like Vanity Fair, Vogue, GQ,
Wired, and Bon Appetite.
And they will be joined by many, many others read
by millions of users daily.

News isn't just for the media titans.
Great content comes from all kinds of sources,
and we want them all in News, so whether it's a local newspaper,
a blog, or a special-interest publication,
they will all be here.
We will be rolling out News starting in the United States,
the UK, and Australia.
We think you are really going to like it.
Next, let's turn to iPad.
Now, iPad is a transformational device.
For our users in education, business, and at home,
for many of them, their iPad is their primary computer.
And iPads are just tremendously powerful, so in iOS 9,
we are elevating the iPad experience to a whole new level.

Now, it starts with something really simple,
which is how you work with text.
That brings us to the QuickType keyboard.

Now, in iOS 8, we introduced the Suggestion bar
that makes it quicker than ever to type
and enter what you are trying to get in.

But now, in iOS 9, we've added shortcuts to that bar,
so with just a tap, you can cut, copy, paste, format your text,
access your attachments.

It's really handy.
But you know, what makes a Multi-Touch keyboard
so special is that it can be anything you want.

It can transform.
So now when you want to move the cursor or make a selection,
you can now just put two fingers down on the keyboard,
and it becomes a trackpad instantly.
You can move the cursor, you can make selections.

Of course, you can use the shortcut bar to cut,
drag to a new place, and paste, editing more quickly
than ever before and without your fingers ever leaving the
home row.
It's really great.
And if you do occasionally want to hook a physical keyboard
to your iPad as well, we made that better than ever.
We provide a way to discover all of the shortcuts
that can accelerate your operations
in the applications using the keyboard,
and we've provided shortcuts for app switching.

This might look familiar to some of you.
As well as to searching in Spotlight.
So that's QuickType, but now I want to turn to the big one,
and that's Multitasking.
So iPad has always supported forms of multitasking,
like this great graphical task switcher,
and these nice four-finger gestures
that let you move between applications.

But for iOS 9, we are taking it to a whole new place,
and I'd like to show that to you now.
So let's start here on my iPad.
And what I am going to do first is double-tap
on the Home button, and you will see our new task switcher.

It's really gorgeous.
Big, full-screen previews of all the apps.
Just move right into Safari like this.

But of course, often when I am in an app like Safari,
I then just want to quickly check my messages.
So now with just a single finger swipe from the side,
I can slide it right in with what we call Slide Over.
Of course, it's fully interactive.
I can take a quick look, maybe type a response,
put it right back, I am back in Safari.
Do that again.
From the top, I can pull down and bring in other applications.

So let's bring in Calendar.
Of course, fully interactive so I can tap into another day.
Let's bring in another app.

I am going to bring in the new Notes app.
Just like that.
Now, sometimes, of course, I want to stay working in Notes
and Safari both at the same time, so I can just tap here
on the divider, and now I am in split view.
They are both completely active.

In fact, for the first time ever, multiapp, Multi-Touch,
I can move them both at the same time.
Now, Notes is actually pinned to the side now,
so I want to show you what happens when I switch apps.
I am just going to move over here to Photos.

You notice now I have Photos with Notes on the side.
This is really great if I am taking notes while working
across a bunch of experiences.

And of course those four-finger gestures continue to work great,
so I can swipe my way right back into Safari.
I can follow links, of course, from my notes.

Let me tap on this link, and you see Safari loads it right here
on the side.
I can adjust the split.

Let me move that over to a nice 50/50 view
with Notes and Safari.
I can tap on links to other apps,
so let's follow a link into Maps.
Maps -- I really want location accuracy.
Thank you, very helpful.

Slides right in and shows me the location.
I can follow another link, Maps adjusts,
I am able to stay focused right here
in these two apps side by side.
Let's say I now want to work Notes full screen.
I can pull right across like that
and I am in full-screen Notes.
This gives me a great opportunity
to show you what's new with the QuickType keyboard.

I have a to-do list I am building here.
I am going to add an item here to buy a new ice chest.
There we go.

On second thought, I should probably borrow one.
I am going to take two fingers
down on the keyboard, swipe over here.

I can reposition the cursor like this.
Tap and make a selection.
Extend the selection.

And type "borrow."
It's really easy.
I can make bigger moves too.

I can go to the top here, maybe select the whole sentence,
drag down, maybe do a checklist like this, and check them off.
Just like that.

Super cool.
Next I want to show you multitasking in the context
of something I think we all do quite a bit on our iPads,
which is not that -- which is watching ESPN.
So let's bring up a video.

I am going to play right here.
Now, often when I am watching a video, I may decide I want
to look something up or check something
or maybe even get a notification, and I want you
to watch what happens when I tap.
Watch the video.

Now I have Picture in Picture.
So I can still listen, I can watch my video, I can,
of course, resize the PIP if I want, like this.
I can move it around the screen so it's out of the way
of what I am working on.

I can even move it off the side.
Sometimes I just want to listen for a while while I work.
Of course, it stays with me wherever I go.

I can pull it back, and when I am done,
just tap to put it away.
And that is Multitasking in iOS 9.

So iOS 9 delivers this great app switcher, and of course,
that's available on iPhone as well.

On iPad, we have Slide Over so you can bring apps
in from the side.
You can tap and enter split view
for simultaneous live two apps up.
And of course, Picture in Picture.
Now, we provide developer APIs to let your apps work this way,
and the good news is that you've already done most of that work
because if you've adopted Auto Layout and size classes
to work great on the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus, well, that carries
over just like this onto iPad.
Twitter came in and was able to do it just in minutes.
It was really incredible.

Now, Slide Over is available for the iPad Air, Air 2, mini 2,
and mini 3, as is Picture in Picture,
and our most powerful split view is available
on our most powerful iPad, the iPad Air 2.
That's Multitasking.
So we've seen some great end-user features,
but of course, we've also focused on the foundations.
In performance, as you saw earlier in El Capitan with OS X,
we've taken the core frameworks that we use for drawing
on the system, Core Animation and Core Graphics,
and we put them on top of Metal.

We are seeing great acceleration,
1.6 times improvements in animations and scrolling,
and a 50 percent reduction in CPU usage for drawing.

It's really great.
With battery life, we focused
on real-world use cases and optimized them.

And we are seeing an addition of one hour of typical use
on a full charge on iPhone.
Now, we know that for a lot of you if you are running low
on power, you start searching all over for switches
and turning off features in the hope
of extending your battery life a little bit further.
Well, now in iOS 9, we give you a single switch
to enter what we call Low Power mode, and it pulls levers
that you didn't even know existed and is able
to extend battery life for an additional three hours
of typical use on top of that additional hour.

It's really great.
Now, with security, we want to protect our users' data
on device and in the cloud,
and so we are bringing two-factor authentication
and making it easy for everyone to protect their data in iCloud.

And with Software Update, we want everyone to get to iOS 9,
and so we've done major enhancements to the architecture
for our over-the-air updates, and we have been able
to reduce the amount of free space you need to get to iOS 9
from the 4.6 gigs that it took to get to iOS 8
down to just 1.3, so we think everybody is going
to be getting to iOS 9.
So iOS 9, intelligence throughout the system,
Apple Pay, enhancements to really popular apps like Notes
and Maps, an all-new News app, and incredible features now
for iPad with Multitasking and QuickType, and of course,
enhancements to the foundations.
Now, iOS 9 is a great release for our users, but once again,
it's a fantastic release for all of you developers,
bringing a ton of new features.
You saw search extensibility.
We are adding UI testing to Xcode.

[Cheers and applause] Yes!
We have a new technology called App Thinning,
which optimizes your downloads to exactly the subset
of resources needed for that user's device, so you are able
to get -- take less space on device.
It's really great.

Now, when it comes to gaming, we've enhanced SpriteKit,
SceneKit, and Metal and introduced three new frameworks,
GameplayKit to bring artificial intelligence
with path avoid obstacle avoidance and path finding;
Model I/O to provide beautiful lighting
on your 3D models; and ReplayKit.

It lets you enhance your applications
to let users record their game play as video and share it.
It's really great.

Now, HealthKit has been on fire, so we've continued --
well, we added water, actually, to HealthKit.

We are not trying to put out the fire.
We are adding lots of additional health metrics to be tracked,
for instance, hydration, UV exposure,
and reproductive health.
Now, HomeKit has been taking off
with manufacturers introducing HomeKit peripherals
to the market now in areas like thermometers, locks, and lights.
And now in iOS 9, we are adding support
for window shades, sensors of all kinds.

For instance, carbon monoxide sensors, motion sensors.
And we're adding support for security systems as well.
Perhaps most importantly, we are allowing you
to access your home remotely and securely via iCloud.
So no matter where you are, you can control all
of your HomeKit devices.

Next, CarPlay.
So CarPlay supports audio apps and now, in iOS 9,
it also supports apps by the automaker to control things
in your own car without leaving the CarPlay experience.
And CarPlay is supporting more kinds of screens,
wider aspect ratios, high DPI.
But most significantly with CarPlay,
we are pulling the cord.

In future cars, you will be able to get in your car
without taking your phone out of your bag or out of your pocket
and start experiencing CarPlay effortlessly.

It's going to be really great.
Finally, let's talk about Swift.

[Cheers and applause]
You all know that the growth
that Swift has been experiencing is just unprecedented,
and we've all seen it with the flood
of applications coming in to the App Store.
Well, now we are stepping on the gas this year with Swift 2.

Now, Swift was designed from the beginning to be fast,
and we've continued to roll
out targeted optimizations all year long, and now with Swift 2,
we have an all-new optimization technology that's especially
great for complex applications and object-oriented programming
that we call Whole Module Optimization,
and the results are really fantastic.
In addition, we are bringing the language features
that you've asked for most,
an elegant new error handling model,
the ability to see your interfaces
as synthesized headers in Xcode, and the feature
that Tim has been begging for all year, protocol extensions.
You are all going to love it.
Now, we think Swift is the next big programming language,
the one that we will all be doing application
and systems programming on for 20 years to come.
And we think Swift should be everywhere and used by everyone,
and so we're going to be doing something really big.
Today we are announcing that Swift will be open source.
[Cheers and applause]
We will be rolling out the compiler
and the standard libraries for iOS, OS X, and Linux.
And it will all be out there by the end of the year.

So that's Swift, and that is iOS 9.
We are doing a developer beta -- you guessed it --
today, and for the first time for a major iOS release,
a public beta, so sign up now at beta.apple.com,
and you can get the beta when it comes out in July.
And of course, we will be rolling it
out as a free upgrade in the fall.
And iOS 9 will support all of the devices
that were supported by iOS 8.

We are not dropping any this year
because we want everyone to get iOS 9.
That's iOS 9.
I really appreciate your time.
Have a fantastic conference.

Thank you.
[Cheers and applause]
TIM COOK: Thanks, Craig.

iOS just keeps getting better and better for our many hundreds
of millions of users, and iOS 9 takes it
to an even greater level with incredible new apps
and intelligence built right into iOS.
And as an avid iPad user, I am also incredibly excited
about how far it extends the iPad experience as we continue
to lead in the post-PC era.
With El Capitan, we've created a new version of OS X
that dramatically improves the experience
and the user experience and the performance of the Macintosh.
And of course, Swift.
You've just heard Swift provides a single language for you
to create apps for both OS X and iOS.
There's really so many possibilities for you
to use these platforms and these tools
to create unbelievable apps that will impact business
and healthcare and education and really everything in our lives.
There's seemingly no limit to what you can do.

And of course, underpinning this, the App Store is very key.
It's hard to believe that the App Store was launched only
seven years ago.

It's hard to remember a day without it.
Now, I'm happy to announce
that the App Store recently passed a major milestone.

The App Store has passed 100 billion apps downloads.
The rate of growth and the momentum is
absolutely staggering.
The industry has never seen anything like this before.
The App Store has forever changed software
and software distribution.
And it's also been an economic boon.
We've now paid over $30 billion to developers.

The App Store continues
to be the most profitable app marketplace on the planet.

Now, we could not be more proud of the work that you are doing.
More and more, developers are transforming, empowering,
and reimagining the very important things
that we do in our daily lives.
We've made a video about your incredible impact
and just how far you've come in such a short period of time,
and I'd love to run it for you now.
Eight years ago, when the iPhone was launched,
it didn't have an App Store.

And there was tremendous desire on the part of developers
and customers for Apple
to let third-party applications be created.

We all had this dream that apps were going
to become really important, but it took some time
to realize how they would affect everything that we care about,
and as that cumulative effect appeared, then we all start
to realize, oh, my goodness, this is bigger
than any of us imagined.

Apps plus handheld devices,
I think that's a watershed moment in civilization.
I put it up there with the invention
of the microscope and the telescope.
We live in a time where the most powerful tools ever imagined
to investigate and probe our world are in the hand
of essentially everyone.
If you think the Industrial Revolution was transformational,
the App Store is way bigger.

I don't think we've seen anything reach a mass adoption
at anything close to this pace.
It took, for example, electricity over a hundred years
to get to its first 50 million users.
It took television 13 years, and the App Store got
to 50 million users in only 17 months.

The thing the App Store did was give each
and every developer a voice.
It's a testament that two guys in a room working
on an idea can launch an app and instantly have hundreds
of millions of people very quickly.
The iPhone made photography universally accessible.

I cannot think of a single industry
that doesn't need an app.
People want data at their fingertips.

They want personalized experiences.
They want power over their money.
And it's not just for banking; it's for every industry.

The App Store has fundamentally shifted how we all need
to deliver.
It's leveling the playing field.

We don't have to own things.
We don't have to own our own cars.
We don't have to own our own music.

We can call it up when we need it.
That's a big change, all flowing from the idea
of not just convenience but people building
up an infrastructure around that.
We are now talking not about hundreds
of people getting the benefits of an idea, but millions.

If you had told me when I was a kid that you would be able
to write an idea and then film that idea and then distribute it
to the world on a device that you could also put
in your pocket, I would never have stopped laughing,
and I would have thought you were insane.
The App Store gives everyone access
to incredibly powerful tools,
and there's an incredible generation of filmmakers
and storytellers to come.

Kids love technology, and they love interacting
with the iPad and with apps.
That wonder and awe that gets ignited is actually being
utilized to help that person learn.
Certainly in education there's so much potential
to take the classroom with you anywhere.

We all know we are in this magic moment.
There are so many incredible apps, and they do things
for people that change their lives.

Music for me, it's like everything.
It's really special.
This amazing feeling that music gives me, I want everyone
to have that, even if the person cannot hear.
So the idea of the app is to introduce music for deaf people.
I am going to put these on your wrist, so if you play,
you can feel the vibrations.
I can feel it.
Did you feel that, Rob?
My dream is to bring music to everyone.
It is an amazing time to be a developer.
We are still just at the beginning of all this,
this moment where the technology of an iPhone and an iPad
and the Watch enable so many incredible things.
There's so much that can still change and evolve due
to the power of applications.
[Music]
TIM COOK: On behalf of everyone at Apple,
we want to thank the developer community
for everything that you've done.

Thank you.
You have changed so many parts of all of our lives
and transformed the world in the process.
Now, we want to talk about now the next opportunity
to transform the world.

And that's the opportunity to bring native apps to the Watch
with a new version of watchOS.
For us, this is a giant moment.
This is how we felt when we launched the App Store.
Opening a new platform to developers
to create new applications
that can really change people's lives.
We really believe deeply in this space.

We believe in technology designed for the wrist.
And we believe by opening up the platform
that you will create new and powerful uses
that today we can only begin to imagine.
We began making the Apple Watch available just six weeks ago,
and it's pretty amazing that today we're already talking
about the next version of the watchOS.
This new version will have great new capabilities,
and it will bring native apps right to your wrist.

To tell you all about it, I'd like to invite up my friend
and colleague Kevin Lynch.
Kevin.

[Cheers and applause]
KEVIN LYNCH: Hi.
So we're moving really fast on watchOS, and I am super excited
to talk with you about the enhancements that are coming
in watchOS, as well
as the powerful new abilities for app development.

Let's start with the enhancements.
The enhancements include great new Timepiece functions,
improvements in communication as well as in Health & Fitness,
and support for the new capabilities
in Apple Pay, Maps, and Siri.
Let's start with Timepiece.

Now, already, Apple Watch is a really great timepiece,
the most customizable one in the world, and a lot of that is due
to the Watch faces and how you can change them.

We are adding some new Watch faces in watchOS 2.
That includes a beautiful new Photos face to be able
to select any photo you have and create a Watch face out of it.

You can create more than one and switch between them as you like.
Or you can select a photo album,
and every time you raise your wrist,
you will see a different photo from your album show up.
It's a great way of seeing your photos throughout the day.
We went a little further with this,
and we shot some photos ourselves.
We did some time-lapse photography
in some beautiful locations around the world.

The way this works is when you raise your wrist,
you will see this 24-hour shoot we have done
in different locations, and it will be the current time there.

If it's in noon, you will see noon in London.
If it's night, you'll see Big Ben all lit up.
We've done this not only for London,
but some other locations too.
You can choose from Hong Kong, Mack Lake --
which a beautiful place in the Sierras --
as well as New York, Shanghai, and London.
It's a great way to see really beautiful imagery, both your own
and these time-lapse images, on your wrist.

You can customize your Watch with these images
but you can also choose to show the information that you
like on your Watch face with something
in traditional Watch terms that's called Complications.
With watchOS 2, we are really excited to enable app developers
to make your own Complications.

So be able to do things like show your flight time
from United, see the state of your home control system,
look at the charge level of your electric car,
or see sports scores, for example, from the MLB app.
You can choose the information that you most
like to see right on your Watch face.
It's going to be really, really cool.
And this will work not only on the modular face
but across the others that support Complications as well.
You will be able to choose from a variety of templates,
and we'll make those look beautiful in each
of the different Watch faces.
So it's going to be a really fast way
to look at this information.

Now, we went further than this.
We thought it's really great to be able
to see the current information,
but what about future information,
like the weather later today or your meeting
after the current one?
And what if you could go forward in time and actually see
that information update on your Watch face?
Well, we are supporting that in watchOS 2
with something we call Time Travel.
And you will be able to rotate your Digital Crown,
and you can go both forward and backward through time,
and the information will update right on your screen.
Let's take a look here.
So I've got my meeting in the middle there and weather
and the charge level of the car and time in London.
When I rotate the Crown, you can see it's changing the time
and showing me things that are coming up.

Now, we know a really popular one here might be the stocks
Complication, but we haven't cracked that one yet.
We are working on it.

You can keep rotating, keep going forward,
get all the way to tonight.
You can see I have a date night tonight, weather is going
to be good, time in London will be 2:00 a.m. You can see all the
information you like to see in the time you want to look at it.
Really, really fun way to interact
with time on your Watch.
That's Time Travel.
Now, we also thought, What would be a great experience
for the Watch when it's on your nightstand and charging?
Well, we've come up with a new user interface for this
in watchOS 2 called Nightstand Mode.
When you put your Watch on its side and it's charging,
you will get this beautiful display now of the time,
and of course, you can set an alarm that will wake you
up in the morning, and it will go something like this.
[Alarm tone]
So a beautiful little bedside alarm clock now
with Apple Watch, and the buttons on the side
and the Crown act as your Snooze and your Off button.

A really fun way to have a Nightstand view on your Watch.
Those are some of the great new Timepiece functions
that are coming in watchOS 2.

Let's look at communication.
Now, already Apple Watch is great
at communicating with your friends.

You can just press the side button and see your 12 friends
that you have selected.
Now, we realize that some of you have more than 12 friends,
so now in watchOS 2, you can have different sets
of friends you can select, and you can add a friend right
from your Watch by pressing the plus sign
and add a friend right there.
Isn't that cool?
Now, when you are communicating with someone,
you can make a phone call or send a message or send a drawing
with Digital Touch, and now in watchOS 2, you will be able
to use multiple colors in your drawings,
so you can draw a beautiful flower
that has more than just one color.

Even my drawings are starting to look better now with this.
Also an email.
You can already read email on your Watch.

With watchOS 2, you will be able to reply to email.
And with the phone, you can already take phone calls
on your Watch.
We are now going to support FaceTime Audio,
so you will get really high-fidelity calls right
on your wrist.
And with Health & Fitness,
already Apple Watch is a great partner for Health & Fitness.
With watchOS 2, we are enabling your favorite fitness apps
to run natively on the Watch
so you can use them wherever you are, and your workouts
with these apps will contribute directly
to your all-day activity, which will be really great,
so if you go on a bike ride, it will count.
We are also enabling Siri to start workouts,
so you can just raise your wrist and say, hey, Siri,
start a 30-minute run in the park,
and it will start the Workout app and get it going for you.

You can also say things like "go for a 300-calorie bike ride"
or "go for a 5-mile run, " and it will start the workout
for you without having to touch the watch at all.

When you achieve something,
there are some beautiful new achievements you will see
that look like this.

They spin right in, they're beautiful, you can play
with them in 3D on the Watch, they are engraved
on the back now with your name, and you can share these
with people over Messages, Facebook, or Twitter.
Really cool Health & Fitness.
With Apple Pay, you saw some
of the great new support we are bringing
for store cards and rewards cards.

We are supporting that in the Watch,
so you can select a store card and use it right in your Watch
in a merchant terminal just by waving it
at the store stand there.
And with Wallet coming to Watch,
all of your rewards cards will be right there,
and you can also use those right from your Watch
as you are doing purchases.
With Transit, we are supporting, of course,
the mass transit capabilities in Maps now, so you will be able
to see the transit lines on your wrist.
You can actually see the departure times
for different stations you are near.
When you are navigating, you will get step-by-step directions
about getting through the different mass transit you use.

With Siri, we are continuing to add new domains for Siri.
In watchOS 2, we are enabling Siri
to get you mass transit directions, like bus directions
to the Ferry Building, which will look like this
and you can just start navigating.
Or you can control things in your home with Siri,
you can say things like "hey Siri set the dinner scene,"
and it will talk to any HomeKit-enabled devices
in your house and set the lights just how you want them.

Isn't that cool?
It's going to be great.
Another great thing is you can actually ask for any
of the Glances you have, so you can say "hey, Siri,
show me the Instagram Glance," and it will show
up right on your Watch face.
This could be a glance you don't have currently selected.
It's a great way to show information
from third-party apps right there in Siri.
So those are just some of the highlights
of what's coming in watchOS 2.

We think it's going to be a really,
really great update to the Watch.
Now, that's not all.

We also, of course, focused on what we can do for developers,
and already, out of the gate on day one, you can build apps
for Apple Watch using something called WatchKit,
and that has enabled many thousands of apps now
to be created for Apple Watch, and these apps today function
by relying on your phone.
So you might have, for example, an app on your Watch
and the user interface runs on your phone
and the user interface is on your Watch, but all the logic
for your app today runs on your phone.
With native apps, you will be able to move that logic
to the watch so both the UI and the logic are there,
it will all run locally, performance will be great,
responsiveness will be great,
it's going to be a great new frontier for apps on Apple Watch
with native app support.
When you are actually wandering away from your phone sometimes,
your apps will be able to communicate directly
with the network with known Wi-Fi networks,
so you can get the information you want wherever you are
with your Watch.
So we heard from you as we were working on native apps,
a lot of feature requests of things you would
like to do on the Watch.

These are a bunch of the things that we've heard.
So we've been listening to that.
Let's go through some of the things
that will be possible now in watchOS 2.
You can see how we did on this.
So one of the things we heard was really wanted
to access the microphone on the Watch.
So yes, in watchOS 2, you can access the microphone right
on the Watch and bring that audio right into your app.

We also heard you want to play audio out of the speaker.
You can do that.

WatchOS 2 with native apps, you can play back
through the Watch speaker or you can play audio
to a Bluetooth headset or speaker connected,
both short-form and long-form audio.
Video. We know you wanted to play video.
You can play back short-form video right on the Watch face.

It looks beautiful on the Watch display.
Access to HealthKit.
We definitely heard that.

You now will have access, native HealthKit on the watch,
including streaming heart rate data, so if you are doing,
for example, a bike ride with Strava,
you can see what heart rate zone you are in while you are biking.
HomeKit is natively on the Watch so you will be able to talk
to your HomeKit devices from your Watch and control them.
We think this is going to be a great future
for control right from your wrist.

You will be able to access the Accelerometer
so you can get movement data.
So for example, from the iPING golf app here, you can check
out your golf swing tempo
as you are swinging the golf club with your Watch on.
Taptic Engine is one of the things we've really done a lot
of focused work on to make it a great experience on the wrist.
We are bringing access to the Taptic Engine for you
for your app development.

You will be able to choose from a range of different feelings
as well as audio that will come out the speaker.
So for example, if I am unlocking my car here,
I will get feedback on my wrist, both audio and felt.
Just like that.
Another great interaction on the Watch is using the Digital Crown
to manipulate the UI, and we are enabling access to Digital Crown
as well with watchOS 2.
You will be able to control custom UI element
like changing the temperature here just
by rotating the Crown like this.
Super easy way to interact with your Watch.

So we've done a great job bringing a lot of access
to the Watch now with native apps.

I would like to show you a demo now with some examples.
So I've got a Watch here, and I am going to put it on.

It's connected to the display here through this little cable.
All right.
Let's start by looking at three examples of new features
in watchOS 2, then I will show you three apps.
Let's start with making a photo face,
so I will press my Digital Crown here, go to the Home screen.

There's my Photos.
You can see I've got a bunch of photos on here.
I can zoom in with the Crown, pan around,
and I can pick a photo
that might make a nice Watch face like that one.
I want to zoom in and crop it a little more.

I am going to zoom in a little more, move it over like
that to get it just right.
I think that's going to make a great Watch face,
so I just Force Touch, choose Create Watch Face,
and there you go, a beautiful new Watch face.
Let's look at Time Travel.
I will go over to my modular face,
got some more information here.

I have flight times here on United.
I can see the temperature,
my VW car's charge level, and time in London.

So I just rotate the Crown here, I can go forward in time.
Time is updating.
My flight is leaving, you can see, at 1:45.

I wonder if my charge level will be enough to get to the airport.
So if I keep going forward in time here, we will get to 1:45,
and you can see my charge level is just going to be great
to get to the airport.
In fact, you can keep going and look at boarding time
and arrival time for your flight.

So you can get a great preview of your day just
by rotating the Crown right on the Watch face.
It's a lot of fun.

Just press the Crown and go back to Home.
If you get an email, you can reply to email now in watchOS 2.
Here is an email that's just come in from Marc.

I can reply to this by pressing the button right below the
message, or you can use Siri to reply
to a message right from a notification.

If I just use Siri here, I can reply like this.
Reply: I would love to.
So Siri is making the message there.

It's created a response.
I just press Send, and it now goes off to Marc.
So just by pressing the Crown, you can use Siri
to send a message right from your wrist.
Now, let's look at a few third-party apps.
Let's look at the VW app you saw on slides a second ago.

I will show you how that works.
Here it is.
Now, I can lock my car just
by pressing this control right here.
It responds right away.
You can see the app also opened very quickly.

And I can control the temperature here
that we were looking at before by just rotating the Crown.
You can see how responsive it is as I go up and down
through temperatures here.
Really, really cool.
I will get it nice and warm for me so when I get down there,
it will be nice and toasty.
Okay. Turn it on.
All right.

I've got confirmation that it actually enabled
that on my car now.
Access to the mic is going to be really helpful in apps,
and some of the apps that will really benefit are communication
apps like We Chat.
A lot of messages sent via WeChat are audio messages,
so let's see how that will work with watchOS 2.
I have a message from Becky.
I can reply by pressing the Reply button,
and you can see I've got a microphone now
so I can do an audio response.
Let's do that.

That sounds great.
You can see as I was recording it, it got the audio levels
of my voice and now it sent that to Becky.

I can also reply with stickers here.
There's different categories of them.
With the Digital Crown now being able to connect to the UI,
I can flip through recent stickers, pick one quickly
that I like, and just send that one as well.
So very fast to interact now
with all these new controls you have available in watchOS 2.
Now, let's look at the Vine glance.
Vine is a great example of playing back video on the Watch,
and its format is really perfect for the Watch face.
Here is a recent one on Vine.
So that's video playing back right on the Watch face.

So those are just some examples of what you can do now
with watchOS 2, and I am super excited
to see what all you guys do with all this stuff.

So some great new enhancements coming,
as well as some super powerful app development tools for you.

And we've been working really hard on this,
and I am really happy to say that this stuff is all available
to you today to start building these native apps.

Just six weeks from our launch, it's unbelievable.
Then it will be available in the fall to everyone,
and we will work across all the watches,
of course, and it will be free.
So this has been a great adventure.

We are just getting started here,
and I am really looking forward to the journey ahead with all
of you on Apple Watch.

Thank you very much.
Back to Tim.
Thank you, Tim.
TIM COOK: Thanks, Kevin.
We're really excited to have Apple Watch out in the world,
and we can't wait to see what you do with watchOS.
And we couldn't be more excited about how developers
and users will use the powerful ecosystems of both products
and platforms, three amazing platforms.
The opportunities really are limitless.
Now, before we close this morning, we do have ...

one more thing.
[Cheers and applause]
I'd like to tell you about something
that we've been working really hard on
and something we are super excited about.
You know, we love music, and music is such an important part
of our lives and our culture.
We've had a long relationship with music at Apple,
and music has had a very rich history of change,
some of which we've played a part in.
We've made a great video about the history of music,
and I would like to play it for you this morning.

[Music]
[Cheers and applause]
TIM COOK: Today we're announcing Apple Music,
the next chapter in music, and I know you are going to love it.
It will change the way that you experience music forever.
To tell you more about it, I'd like to bring up someone
who knows more about music
and the music experience than anyone I know.
He's worked with amazing artists from Bruce Springsteen
to John Lennon and countless others.
We are thrilled to have him a part of the Apple team.
Please join me in welcoming Jimmy Iovine.

Jimmy.
[Cheers and applause]
JIMMY IOVINE: Thanks, Tim.

Well, it's really an honor to be here.
I'm here because in 2003,
the record industry was a ball of confusion.

We had Napster, we had LimeWire, we had BitTorrent.
This giant invader from the north, technology.
I'm looking at my guys saying, well, what do we do with this?
So I go up to Apple, and I see Steve Jobs and Eddy Cue,
and they showed me something brilliant and groundbreaking,
a simple, elegant way to buy music online, iTunes.

I'm like, wow, the ads are real.
These guys really do think different.
[Laughter] So they could help move culture the same way
that art moves culture.
Technology and art can work together, at least at Apple.
So now 2015, music industry is a fragmented mess.

If you want to stream music, you can go over here.
If you want to stream some video,
you can check some of these places out.

If you want to follow some artist,
there's more confusion for that.
So I reached out to Tim Cook and Eddy Cue, and I said guys,
can we build a bigger and better ecosystem with the elegance
and simplicity that only Apple can do?
One complete thought around music.

And from that, I'm standing here today so proud
of everyone that's worked so hard, and I am going
to introduce you to Apple Music.

Music has such power in our lives.
The way we listen to
and experience music is undergoing a profound change
these days.
To have access to nearly all the music in the world
at our fingertips and in our pockets is remarkable.
And yet there needs to be a place
where music can be treated less like digital bits
and more like the art it is,
with a sense of respect and discovery.
And if that place could actually accommodate
and support the artists who make the music,
not just the top-tier artists,
but the kids in their bedrooms too, provide them all
with a home and a way to engage with their audiences,
that would be pretty great.
And that's what we set out to do with Apple Music.

[Music]
On Apple Music, all the ways you love music can now
live together.

Stream from the millions of songs on iTunes any time
and on demand, along with hand-picked playlists,
recommendations, and all that's great
and breaking in music right now.
And broadcasting every day is Apple's first 24/7 worldwide
radio station, live in over 100 countries,
Beats 1 is anchored by Zane Lowe in LA.
Ero Dodden in New York.
New York City worldwide, this is Beats 1.

And me, Julie out of London.
We cannot wait to play you guys music we've got lined up.
And at the heart of Apple Music, there's Connect,
where artists can share with fans like never before.
Songs, remixes, demos, mix tapes, photos,
videos, lyrics, soundbites.

Really, any way an artist chooses to express themselves.
TRENT REZNOR: For fans,
we tried to create a complete experience,
by combining the catalog of the world's music
with the music that's not in that catalog yet,
direct from the artist to you
in a shared experience with Beats 1.
For the artists, we've built an ecosystem we hope can start
to provide the tools to grow, nurture, and sustain careers.

One place, one complete thought around music.
[Music]
[Cheers and applause]
JIMMY IOVINE: Thank you.
That's Apple Music and the great Trent Reznor.
It's all the ways you love music all in one place.

And that place is almost in a billion hands
around the world already.
One app, one single app on your iPhone.

Apple Music is three things.
It's a revolutionary music service.
Oh. A revolutionary music service curated
by the leading music experts who we helped hand-pick.
These people are going to help you
with the most difficult question in music.

When you are listening to a playlist, what song comes next?
The only song that's as important
as the one you are listening to at
that moment is the one that follows it.
Now, picture this.
You are in a special moment.

You're exercising or some other special moment.
[Laughter] Right, Dre?
He exercises a lot.

And your heart's pumping.
And you are about to turn up the reps.
And the next song comes on, ehhh!
Buzz kill.
You may ask why that happened.
It happened because it was probably programmed
by an algorithm alone.
Algorithms alone can't do that emotional task.
You need a human touch, and that's why at Apple Music,
we want to give you the right song, the right playlist,
at the right moment, all on demand.
Now, the first-ever live 24-hour worldwide radio station,
so Trent Reznor calls me up and says I got it.
This is what we're going to do.
Let's build the first-ever worldwide live radio station
broadcast from three cities that plays music not based
on research, not based on genre, not based on drum beats,
only music that is great and feels great.

A station that has only one master, music itself.
So I said why do artists always have the greatest ideas
that are practically impossible to execute?
So I said, well, wait a second.
That's why we are at Apple.
We are at Apple to help artists' dreams be realized.

So we built the station, and it's a music lover's dream.
If you love great music without any restrictions, you are going
to love Apple Music's Beats 1.

Finally, Connect, a fantastic way for established and new
and even unsigned artists to connect directly
with music lovers anywhere.

This is going to be very powerful for musicians.
Can you imagine being an up-and-coming artist
and being able to share your music
on the biggest music platform on the world
that people already have, Apple Music?
Remember, this is an ecosystem.

It's built to fit together.
It feeds off each other.
When you upload your music
to Apple Music, anything can happen.
So now let me leave the real heavy lifting
to my great friend, Eddy Cue,
and tell you how this all works together.
[Cheers and applause]
EDDY CUE: Thank you, Jimmy.

It's great to be here this morning with you.
So Apple Music, it's a revolutionary music service,
and it starts with My Music.

We've added some great new features from iTunes like the
Up Next queue, and also your recently added albums
and songs right across the top.

And all of the music you've purchased,
along with the playlists you've created on your Mac
or your iPhone, are right here.

Now, of course, you can search your music library,
but now you can search and stream the millions and millions
of songs that we have on iTunes.

Now, in addition to My Music, when you can stream and listen
to any song you want, you need a great place to start,
and that's why we've created For You.

For You recommends playlists and albums
that we think you are going to love.
They are personalized to your taste based
on the music you listen to, the artists you love.
And it isn't just algorithms.
It's recommendations made by real people who love music,
and they are our team of experts.
Now, let's take a look at New.
Here you will discover new artists and albums every week,
along with the top charts, and every one of our playlists,
all human-curated, available by genre or by activity.
So when you think of Apple Music,
it's My Music, For You and New.
It makes it fun and easy
to experience the catalog of the world's music.

And that is the revolutionary music service.
Now let's talk about Radio.
The truth is Internet radio isn't really radio.

It's just a playlist of songs.
And so we wanted to do something really big.
We wanted to create a worldwide live radio station broadcasting
around the globe, and we've done that with Beats 1.
It's the world's best radio station now meets the world's
best voice, and that's why we've hired Zane Lowe.

Zane is a masterful interviewer and an influential music figure
in his own right, and to tell you more about it, here is Zane.
ZANE LOWE: I am a music fan.

I play records.
What I love is watching a group of people react
to a great record for the first time.

When I play that record on the radio, the audience tell me,
the time lines light up,
my friends tell me, my phone lights up.

They love it or they hate it.
But it creates a debate.
That's what good music on the radio does.

When Apple first asked me to be involved in this, they told us
to put the great music in front of the average, the unexpected,
the undiscovered, the anticipated, the underrated.

Their words: Move the needle.
And that's what we are doing.
We have real music fans running this place.

We have great music DJs and incredible artists who are
in the studio right now building real radio shows
that are going to blow your mind.

And the only place that can pull off an imaginative idea
as big as this -- Apple.
We are called Beats 1.

We are always on, playing the music that we love.
EDDY CUE: So Beats 1.

It is worldwide, it is live, it is broadcasting 24 by 7,
and it is coming from New York, LA,
and London, and that is Radio.

Next, we wanted to find a way to bring fans closer
to the artists they love, and we call it Connect.
It's a place where artists are free to upload their music,
their videos, their photos, all directly to a fan.
Let's take Pharrell, a favorite musician and songwriter of mine.
He is prolific, and he does a lot.

Let me show you how it works with Connect.
He takes a lot of photos.
He writes a lot of lyrics.

He's experimenting and mixing songs all the time.
Or he just has something new and interesting to say.
All of this lives right in Connect.

Artists can post and publish and upload anything,
including directly to Facebook, Twitter, and their own website,
and fans can like and comment on those posts.

And it's not just for one artist, but it's for all
of the artists that you love.
And to give you a little sense of what it's
like to be an artist on Connect,
I'd like to invite up a friend, Drake.
[Cheers and applause]
DRAKE: Thank you.
I want to say, honestly, what an honor it is to be in this room
with so many individuals that have changed the way
in which the world relates to technology,
so give yourselves a round of applause, please.
For example, I bought this vintage Apple employee's jacket
using a tool known in the rap world as the Internet.
It's going to be huge this year.

It's out of this world.
He is excited, he knows about it, that guy right there.
[Laughter] Honestly, in all seriousness, I came here today
to share my story, about the way technology changed what I do
for a living.
I am from Toronto, Canada.

[Cheers and applause]
[Laughter]
You know, as a kid growing up, I always wondered if my city
or even my country would have somebody break
into the global music scene as a true superstar.
You know, the dream seemed unattainable at the time.

Even myself, I tried to do it the traditional way,
the towering New York label buildings, the lobby littered
with other people's accomplishments.

It's improbable to think that every talented artist is going
to get a shot to have their vision validated.
And then that's when the game changed.

And we had to change it.
Myself and my team brought our vision
and our music directly to the people.

And that was kind of the first time that we really got noticed.
The dream of being a new artist like myself five years ago
and connecting directly with an audience has never been more
close and reachable than right now.
See, now we encourage you to spend the time on your body
of work, spend the time on your craft, assemble the right body
of work, and instead of having to post your stuff
on all these different and sometimes confusing places,
it all lives in one very simple,
very easy place, and that is Connect.
It's right from where you are in your city
in front of your computer.

And this approach is how we broke in 2008,
and it has been perfected and simplified, of course,
by the great people at Apple.

So you know, as I'm working tirelessly on this next album,
this comes at the perfect time for me.
Given the great success of my last mix tape that went directly
to iTunes, this really --
I can't wait to incorporate Apple Music
and especially Connect into what I am doing next.

I am really excited about what I am working on.
And as an artist, I can say for all those kids sitting at home,
it's truly amazing to be part of something that I believe in,
and this is something that simplifies everything
for the modern musician like myself
and the modern music consumer like you.

So I hope you enjoy Apple Music.
I hope you enjoy Connect.
My name is Drake, and thank you for your time.

Appreciate it.
[Cheers and applause]
EDDY CUE: Thank you, Drake.

And that is Connect.
Now, I'd love to give you a demo of Apple Music,
but before I start, I do want
to wish Phil Schiller a happy birthday.
[Cheers and applause]
So let's go ahead and launch our new Music app.

You will notice right away it's got a brand-new UI,
much simpler to use.
Your recently added albums and songs right across the top.

Let's play this new song from Spoon I added.
[Music]
One of the things you will notice,
we have a new mini player across the bottom
that always shows you what's playing.
If I tap on it, I get full screen,
and I can see the beautiful artwork,
all the playback controls.
I can just swipe down, and it disappears.

Now, I like looking at my music by artist.
It's really easy to do that too.
I will just tap on Albums, switch to Artists,
and let's take a look at Aretha Franklin.
The first thing you will notice is we add beautiful artwork
to all the artist pages.

Notice as I swipe up, it goes away,
and you see Aretha at the top.
No demo goes complete without playing this song.

[Music]
Now, you not only get all of your Aretha Franklin songs
in your music library, but you can also tap on All,
and now you can see all of the songs on Apple Music,
including the latest release, what the top song is,
what the top album is.

Now, it is hard to stop this song, but I want to keep going.
Now let's go back to my library,
and let's take a look at my playlists.

Now, despite the game last night, I am getting ready
for tomorrow night, and I have already started creating
my playlist.

One of the first things you will notice is you can add your own
artwork to your playlist.
I am going to be doing this tonight,
getting the Warriors ready, but let's go back.
It is karaoke night, and these are some of the songs
that our team has to look forward to tonight.

Let's go ahead and play that.
[Music]
Just imagine.

[Music]
Now, if I tap on the mini player,
I can see the full screen.

If I tap on the right-hand side next to the playback controls,
I can see the complete playlist, and it's very easy
for me to reorganize it.

Let's say I want to move Jealous back up,
and now that will be the next song that plays.
It's that simple.

Now, that's great.
The first time we go to For You, we want to find out a little bit
about your musical tastes, so we are going
to ask you what genres you like.
I am a big fan of rock, pop, hip-hop, and alternative.

And now it will ask me for some artists that I like.
Well, I love Bruce Springsteen, so I am going to tap twice.
I like Lorde, like Alabama Shakes.

Now we are going to take all
of this information you've provided, along with all
of your playlists and the songs that you've purchased on iTunes,
and we are going to make recommendations just for you.
So here is one inspired by Bruce Springsteen.
Here's one called Bring the Big Rock.

Let's play that.
[Music]
That's a great Foo Fighters song.

I can just tap and see the rest of the songs.
Definitely going to like this playlist.
Now, here's another one from Pharrell.

I also get new albums that are available to me,
and even some classic albums that I should be listening to.
And so here are some brand-new albums
from the artists that I really love.
Now, here is an interesting one, a Cuban playlist.
You might be wondering how did that get in there?
Well, I like a lot of Latin music, so Apple Music knows that
and is recommending this playlist to me.
Let's take a look at it.

[Music]
Definitely gets my Cuban blood going.
[Music]
Now, this is a playlist I definitely want to keep,
so I am going to tap on the plus sign, and I've added
that now to my playlist.

Now, let's take a look at what's new.
You can see new albums across the top.
More here, and even the hot singles that are out.

Let's play this one from Florence and the Machine.
[Music]
I can keep scrolling and see some recent releases.

But of course, everyone loves the charts, so let's go ahead
and take a look at the charts, see the top songs.
The top albums.

And even the top music videos.
We have tens of thousands of music videos in HD, all ad-free.
Let's take a look at this one from Mark Ronson.

[Music]
I've got to work on some of those moves for next year.
[Laughter] Now, sometimes you just want to sit back
and let someone else be your DJ, so let's go to Radio.
And to give you a little taste
of what Beats 1 is going to sound like ...

Beats 1.
Welcome our special guest,
Florence from Florence and the Machine.

On paper, it sounds like super, not how you think a rock
and roll album would be made.
Was that you in your sweatpants?
That was me in an anorak cycling to the studio.
We are looking for the most exciting music and people
that love it in all corners of the globe,
broadcasting to 100 countries.
That shared experience just got so much bigger.
LA.

New York City.
London.
EDDY CUE: That's really awesome.

Let's take a look at Connect
and see what my favorite artists are up to.
Here's Pharrell and some behind-the-scenes footage.

Here is Chris Cornell.
This is an interesting one.
He has posted lyrics of a new song that's coming out before,
obviously, he's even recorded it.
Here's Bastille.
They are working on their next album.

Let's see what they have to say.
Mark is just through here, and we are working
on a song called Blame, which some of you might have heard
at festivals or gigs before,
but we're really excited to have finally recorded it.
It's a song about gangsters.

And yeah, this is the riff,
which we already have sounding great.
[Music]
EDDY CUE: It's great to be able to get behind the scenes
and see what the process that an artist uses to create a song.
As we keep going down, here's a shot
from Alabama Shakes a couple nights ago.
And here is a studio session, actually, at Capital Studio A.
Those of you who know, Capitol Studio is one
of the premier studios, historical,
and Alabama Shakes was just there a couple nights ago.
[Music]
EDDY CUE: Again, be able
to see things you've never been able to hear or see.
Loren Kramar, you probably have never heard of him.

He is an unsigned artist, I just started following him.
He has posted a new song right up on Connect,
and I would love to play it now.

First time anyone's heard it.
[Music]
Just imagine you are a new artist,
and look at all the people who have been able
to hear this song right now thanks to Connect.
[Music]
So Loren Kramar.
Remember that name.
We think he is going to be really, really huge.

Now, of course, you can always search for music across all
of our millions and millions of songs.
I like to do a little bit of stuff with Siri
because Siri has been learning a lot more about music.
Play Born to Run.
[Music]
It's one of my favorite songs of all time.
Let's get a little more specific.
Play the top ten songs in Alternative.

[Music]
If I tap on the Up Next queue, I can see all
of the top ten songs and what's next.

Now, I feel like reminiscing a little, and let's go back
to my high school days when I graduated.
Play the top song from May 1982.

[Music]
Now, that brings back some memories, but we will leave
that for another time.

Have you ever gone to a movie and you love the soundtrack
or the song that was on there, but you don't know the name
or you have forgotten about it later?
Well, it's really easy with Siri.
Play the song from Selma.
[Music]
Let's do that again.
Play the song from Selma.
[Music]
And that is Siri, and that is Apple Music.
[Cheers and applause]
It is a revolutionary music service
with recommendations just for you,
a worldwide live radio station with the world's best DJs,
an exciting way for fans to connect with artists,
and of course, this is joined by the iTunes Music Store,
the best place to buy music.
Apple Music is all of the ways you love music,
all in one place.
We are launching in over a hundred countries later this
month with iOS 8.4 for your iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad,
as well as a new version of iTunes for the Mac,
a new version of iTunes for Windows,
and Android is coming this fall.

[Cheers and applause]
Apple Music will be just $9.99 a month, the cost of an album.
We want everyone to try it,
so we are making the first three months free.
Now, we want to do something really great for families.

Today you have to buy a music subscription
for each and every person.
Or you share an account even though you are not supposed to.

And now all of you can't play at the same time,
and your playlists
and recommendations get all messed up.

Well, with Apple Music, for just $14.99, you can have
up to six family members.
Everyone gets their own account, their own library,
their own recommendations.
It's an incredible value.

And that is Apple Music.
Thank you.
Turn it back to Tim.

[Cheers and applause]
TIM COOK: Thanks, Eddy.
Isn't that amazing?
We really love Apple Music, and we hope that you do too.
And we are so excited about it,
and with all the countries we are rolling out to,
we made a great ad to tell the world about it.
And I'd love to run it for you now.
This is Zane Lowe of Beats 1.

We've got the whole world locked in for this one.
Brand-new Pharrell.
[Music]
[Cheers and applause]
Now, music connects with us all at such a deep, emotional level.
We couldn't be happier to launch Apple Music,
and we can't wait till you start listening to it
at the end of the month.
This has been a jam-packed morning.

I hope you've enjoyed it as much as we have.
We want to thank everybody for joining us,
especially the developers, and I'd like to recognize all
of the people in Apple, all of our team that have worked
so hard on making and creating all
of these products you've seen this morning.

Thank you, guys.
It is an incredible privilege of a lifetime to work with them.

Now, I've got one last thing.
Before we go, it's only fitting to celebrate the launch
of Apple Music with an incredible music performance
by one of the hottest new artists in music today,
and it's not only a hot new artist, but he's going
to do a worldwide premiere of his newest song this morning.

Please give it up for The Weeknd.
[Cheers and applause]
[Music]
[Cheers and applause]
TIM COOK: Ladies and gentlemen, The Weeknd!
[Cheers and applause]
Everybody have a great week!
It's great to be together!
[Cheers and applause]

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